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SUMMER KING, WINTER FOOL

Ancient solar-king myths are combined with quasi-medieval monarchies in Goldstein's new fantasy (after Strange Devices of the Sun and Moon, 1993, etc.). The god Callabrion is supposed to ascend at midwinter, presage summer, and cause the days to lengthen. But, though midwinter has passed, Callabrion refuses to take his place in heaven: So the days grow still shorter and winter deepens. Gobro, the weak and ineffectual king of Etrara, is poisoned and supplanted by his sister Callia, just as the young nobleman Valdemar goes into exile. Val lodges with a beautiful librarian- -with whose help he discovers that he is the true heir to the throne of Etrara. Callia, meanwhile, declares war on neighboring Shai, but her armies are easily defeated—by treachery, force of arms, and magic. The Shai occupy Etrara, executing Callia and her retinue. Val must find allies where he can, and somehow Callabrion must be persuaded to ascend to heaven and bring summer. Insipid characters and feeble dramatics in a bland setting: not one of Goldstein's better outings.

Pub Date: May 1, 1994

ISBN: 0-312-85632-6

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 1994

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THE ILLUSTRATED MAN

Scientific fiction enclosed in a frame — wanderer meets a tattooed man whose images foretell the future, leaving a space to preview the destiny of the viewer. Here is an open circuit on ideas, which range from religion, to racial questions, to the atom bomb, rocket travel (of course), literature, escape to the past, dreams and hypnotism, children and their selfish and impersonal acceptance of immediate concepts, robots, etc. Note that here the emphasis is on fiction instead of science, and that the stories — in spite of space and futurities — have some validity, even if the derivations can be traced. Sample The Veldt, or This Man, or Fire Balloons, or The Last Night In the World for the really special qualities. A book which is not limited by its special field.

Pub Date: Feb. 23, 1950

ISBN: 0062079972

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Doubleday

Review Posted Online: March 20, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 1950

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ISHMAEL

Here's the novel that, out of 2500 submissions, won the ecological-minded Turner Tomorrow Award—and caused a mutiny among the judges when it was awarded the $500,000 first prize. Is it that good—or bad? No, but it's certainly unusual, even eccentric, enough to place Quinn (the paperback Dreamer, 1988) on the cult literary map. What's most unusual is that this novel scarcely is one: beneath a thin narrative glaze, it's really a series of Socratic dialogues between man and ape, with the ape as Socrates. The nameless man, who narrates, answers a newspaper ad (``TEACHER seeks pupil...'') that takes him to a shabby office tenanted by a giant gorilla; lo! the ape begins to talk to him telepathically (Quinn's failure to explain this ability is typical of his approach: idea supersedes story). Over several days, the ape, Ishmael, as gruff as his Greek model, drags the man into a new understanding of humanity's place in the world. In a nutshell, Ishmael argues that humanity has evolved two ways of living: There are the ``Leavers,'' or hunter-gatherers (e.g., Bushmen), who live in harmony with the rest of life; and there are the ``Takers'' (our civilization), who arose with the agricultural revolution, aim to conquer the rest of life, and are destroying it in the process. Takers, Ishmael says, have woven a ``story'' to rationalize their conquest; central to this story is the idea that humanity is flawed—e.g., as told in the Bible. But not so, Ishmael proclaims; only the Taker way is flawed: Leavers offer a method for living well in the world. After Ishmael dies of pneumonia, his newly converted pupil can only ponder the ape's parting message: ``WITH GORILLA GONE, WILL THERE BE HOPE FOR MAN?'' A washout as a story, with zero emotional punch; but of substantial intellectual appeal as the extensive Q&A passages (despite their wild generalities and smug self-assurance) invariably challenge and provoke: both Socrates and King Kong might be pleased.

Pub Date: Jan. 15, 1992

ISBN: 0-553-07875-5

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Bantam

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 1991

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